Services | Bakker Natural Medicine
Integrated Medical & Specialty Care

Services

Our services are designed to work both independently and together. Some patients come in needing straightforward primary care, preventive care, or help with a new medical concern. Others are looking for more specialized treatment for chronic pain, injury recovery, concussion support, nervous system dysregulation, or workers’ compensation and auto injury care. The goal is not to force every patient into one category, but to use the right level of care for the situation and build a plan that reflects the actual problem.

  • Broad scope of care: Includes naturopathic primary care, nervous system support, pain and injury treatment, and accident-related care.
  • Services that connect: Many patients benefit from combining primary care, physical medicine, procedures, and biofeedback-based treatment.
  • Flexible treatment planning: Care can stand on its own for a specific issue or be integrated into a larger long-term plan.
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How our services fit together

Not every patient needs every service. Some people simply need a good primary care doctor. Others need help with a specific injury, a chronic musculoskeletal problem, a concussion, or a nervous system pattern that has become stuck in stress, poor recovery, or symptom reactivity. What makes an integrated clinic helpful is that these issues often overlap. A person with chronic pain may also have poor sleep and stress-related symptoms. A patient with a work injury may need both procedure-based care and primary care support. Someone recovering from a car accident may need concussion treatment, structural care, and biofeedback-based nervous system support rather than just one isolated intervention.

Because of that, our services are designed to stand on their own when needed, but also to connect naturally when the situation calls for it. A patient may start with primary care and later move into pain treatment. Another may begin with a work injury claim and end up needing neurofeedback or HRV biofeedback as part of recovery. A third may come in specifically for a procedure and then discover that better long-term results require broader support around movement, sleep, stress, or general health. The point is not to stack services unnecessarily. It is to create a plan that matches the real picture.

Naturopathic primary care

Naturopathic primary care is often the foundation of the practice. It includes evaluation of new symptoms, preventive care, management of common acute and chronic concerns, lab review, medication and supplement guidance, and broader treatment planning that considers sleep, stress, nutrition, movement, and the full context of a person’s health. For some patients, this is the main service they need. For others, it becomes the starting point that helps clarify which specialty treatments are also appropriate.

When it stands on its own

Primary care may be the right fit for patients seeking preventive care, workup of new symptoms, chronic disease monitoring, hormone or metabolic support, digestive concerns, sleep issues, or general whole-person medical care.

How it connects to other services

Primary care often overlaps with accident recovery, stress-related conditions, chronic pain, and nervous system care because many injuries and chronic conditions are influenced by broader health factors.

In many cases, primary care provides the broader medical framework that supports more targeted injury, biofeedback, or procedure-based care.

Biofeedback and nervous system support

Biofeedback is a broad category of care focused on nervous system regulation, physiologic self-awareness, and improved resilience. In this practice, that includes both neurofeedback and HRV biofeedback. These services are especially relevant when symptoms seem closely tied to stress physiology, concussion recovery, poor sleep, headaches, autonomic dysregulation, TMJ, IBS, nervous system overload, or a body that has difficulty shifting out of a more reactive state.

Neurofeedback

Used to support brain-based flexibility, regulation, and resilience, especially when concussion recovery or nervous system dysregulation appears to be part of the picture.

HRV Biofeedback

More active physiologic training centered around breathing, heart rhythm, and autonomic nervous system regulation.

When it stands on its own

Biofeedback may be the main treatment focus when the core issue involves stress-related conditions, post-concussion symptoms, headaches, nervous system dysregulation, sleep disruption, or poor stress tolerance.

How it connects to other services

Biofeedback often integrates naturally with injury care, work injury recovery, auto injury care, chronic pain treatment, and primary care because the nervous system influences how intensely symptoms are experienced and how well the body recovers.

Advanced pain and injury treatment

Advanced Pain & Injury Treatments is a broader category that includes more targeted musculoskeletal and procedure-based care for patients dealing with chronic pain, tissue-specific injuries, recurrent flare-ups, or injuries that have not fully improved with basic conservative treatment. This category includes hands-on structural care, injections, shockwave, aspiration, and nerve-focused treatment. These therapies are often used when the problem needs a more specific tissue-based strategy rather than generalized symptom management alone.

Trigger Point Injections

Often used for muscular pain, spasm, trigger points, and myofascial dysfunction that keep recreating symptoms.

Prolotherapy

Used in selected cases involving chronic ligament, tendon, or joint-supporting tissue problems.

Shockwave Therapy

Often considered for stubborn tendon and soft tissue injuries that have become chronic or slow to heal.

Joint Aspirations

Helpful when fluid or swelling inside a joint becomes part of the problem and needs more direct evaluation or treatment.

Neural & Perineural Therapy

May help when pain patterns feel burning, radiating, hypersensitive, or more nerve-related than purely muscular or joint-based.

Manual & Structural Medicine

Hands-on care used to improve movement, reduce compensation patterns, and address the mechanical side of pain and injury.

When it stands on its own

Advanced pain treatment may be the main service when a patient has a clear musculoskeletal complaint, tendon injury, joint problem, trigger point pattern, nerve-sensitive pain pattern, or chronic injury that needs more precise treatment.

How it connects to other services

These treatments often work best when integrated with primary care, biofeedback, concussion care, or accident-related care because pain recovery is frequently influenced by sleep, stress, nervous system regulation, and general health.

L&I and auto injury care

Some patients come in not just with an injury, but with an injury that exists inside a claim system. That is where L&I / workers’ compensation care and Auto Injury / PIP care become especially important. These services are built for situations where the injury itself matters, but so do documentation, recovery planning, and the more layered symptom patterns that develop after work injuries and motor vehicle accidents.

Work injuries may involve musculoskeletal strain, repetitive stress injuries, concussion, chronic pain, stress-related symptoms, or broader health issues that affect recovery. Auto injuries may involve whiplash, headaches, concussion, TMJ, dizziness, nervous system dysregulation, or more persistent pain patterns that emerge after the initial event. In both categories, treatment often overlaps heavily with primary care, advanced pain treatment, and biofeedback.

When these services stand on their own

Some patients need mainly claim-based injury care, including evaluation, treatment, documentation, and recovery planning specific to the work injury or motor vehicle accident.

How they connect to the rest of the clinic

These cases often need integrated care because the injury itself may lead to chronic pain, concussion symptoms, nervous system dysregulation, sleep issues, or broader primary care concerns that affect recovery.

Choosing the right starting point

Patients do not always need to know exactly which service page fits them before they come in. In many cases, the right starting point is simply an evaluation where the broader picture can be clarified. A person may think they need pain treatment but actually need concussion and nervous system support. Another may come in for primary care and realize that an unresolved musculoskeletal issue needs more targeted structural or procedural treatment. Someone with a work or auto injury may need both documentation-based care and a more layered treatment plan that includes biofeedback, manual medicine, or primary care follow-up.

Start with the most obvious issue

If one category clearly stands out, such as primary care, concussion support, chronic pain, or injury care, that is often the best entry point.

Refine the plan from there

Once the bigger picture is clearer, the treatment plan can be narrowed or expanded to include the services that actually fit the clinical need.

Let the services work together when needed

The goal is to create a plan where each part of care supports the others rather than treating symptoms in isolation.

Good integrated care does not mean doing everything. It means using the right combination of services when they are actually relevant, and letting a focused service stand on its own when that is all a patient needs.

Schedule a visit to discuss the right service for you

Whether you are looking for primary care, help with a chronic injury, nervous system support, workers’ compensation care, or treatment after a motor vehicle accident, we can help determine which service or combination of services fits your situation best. The right plan may be focused and simple, or it may draw from several areas of the clinic depending on what is actually going on.